Browsing Posts tagged Dian Fossey

— Recently, Advocacy for Animals presented an interview with the esteemed chimpanzee expert and conservationist Jane Goodall, who began her career as a protégé of Louis Leakey. Dian Fossey (1932–85) was another researcher who got her start under Leakey’s guidance. She spent almost two decades studying and working with the mountain gorillas in Rwanda and became a leading anti-poaching advocate, a role that many believe led to her murder by unknown assailants in 1985. Following is the Encyclopaedia Britannica biography of Fossey.

Dian Fossey was born on January 16, 1932, in San Francisco, California. She trained to become an occupational therapist at San Jose State College and graduated in 1954. She worked in that field for several years at a children’s hospital in Louisville, Kentucky.

In 1963 she took a trip to eastern Africa, where she met the anthropologist Louis Leakey and had her first glimpse of mountain gorillas. She returned to the United States after her trip, but in 1966 Leakey persuaded her to go back to Africa to study the mountain gorilla in its natural habitat on a long-term basis. To this end, she established the Karisoke Research Centre in 1967 and began a hermitlike existence in Rwanda’s Virunga Mountains, which was one of the last bastions of the endangered mountain gorilla. Through patient effort, Fossey was able to observe the animals and accustom them to her presence, and the data that she gathered greatly enlarged contemporary knowledge of the gorilla’s habits, communication, and social structure. continue reading…

"Service Animal" Scammers (New Yorker): An increasing number of your neighbors have been keeping company with their pets in human-only establishments simply by claiming that the creatures are their licensed companion animals and are necessary to their mental well-being.